1st Edition

King Creole The Disputed Territories of 1950s American Youth Culture

By Anthony Thomas McKenna Copyright 2026
136 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

136 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book positions King Creole in the disputed territories of 1950s youth culture. It is one of Elvis’s best regarded films, but one of his least financially successful. It is a portrait of youthful alienation and juvenile delinquency made at a time when these topics were becoming less fashionable in teenpics. The author argues that King Creole 's release during the death throes of rock and... Read more

Introduction: Locating Elvis Presley in the Disputed Territories of 1950s Rock and Roll  1. Screening Elvis, Harnessing Elvisness  2. Packaging Youth: From A Stone for Danny Fisher to King Creole  3. Analysing King Creole: A Portrait of Grief, Hubris and Readjusting  4. Elvis and Wallis: Renegotiating Elvisness  Conclusion

Biography

Anthony Thomas McKenna is Senior Lecturer in Film at Liverpool John Moores University. He is the author of Showman of the Screen: Joseph E. Levine and His Revolutions in Film Promotion and co-author (with Andrew Spicer) of The Man Who Got Carter: Michael Klinger, Independent Production and the British Film Industry, 1960–1980. His other work has appeared in a variety of scholarly journals and edited collections.